{"1": {"fulltext": "V\\nE", "height": "2849", "width": "2012", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0001.jp2"}, "2": {"fulltext": "LIBRARY_OF CONGRESS,\\n._ CopyTiMt Nc\\nChap. Copyrignt No\\nUNITED STATES OF AMERICA.", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0002.jp2"}, "3": {"fulltext": "", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0003.jp2"}, "4": {"fulltext": "", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0004.jp2"}, "5": {"fulltext": "Anti-Carnegie\\nSCRAPS\\nAND\\nCOMMENTS\\nBy\\nM. F. AND J. C. CAMPBELL\\nPITTSBURG\\n1899", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0005.jp2"}, "6": {"fulltext": "Copyright, 1899, by\\nJ. C. CAMPBELL,\\nNOV i. \u00c2\u00abJ ios\\nSHI SECOND COPY.", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0006.jp2"}, "7": {"fulltext": "TO OUR AMERICAN SOLDIERS,\\nON LAND AND ON SEA, THIS\\nBOOK IS AFFECTIONATELY\\nDEDICATED BY THE\\nA UTHORS", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0007.jp2"}, "8": {"fulltext": "", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0008.jp2"}, "9": {"fulltext": "Preface\\nThis little volume is a veritable\\nhistory of the anti-imperial craze,\\nwhich was started in Pittsburg, No-\\nvember, 1898, by Andrew Carnegie.\\nThe writers noted it from the first\\nripple, and the source from whence\\nit came.\\nDoes Andrew Carnegie stand by\\nthe flag of this country He has\\nexpressed sympathy for and given\\nencouragement to the armed bands\\nof Filipinos, but he has neither for\\nour American soldiers who are now\\n5", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0009.jp2"}, "10": {"fulltext": "PREFACE\\nengaged in the final conquest of the\\nPhilippines, to prevent our flag from\\nbein\u00c2\u00a3 hauled down from where it\\nhas been planted. The flag that\\nshrouds the forms of our dead he-\\nroes. The flag that only waves over\\nthe land of the free.\\nThe Authors.", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0010.jp2"}, "11": {"fulltext": "Anti-Carnegie\\nScraps and Comments\\nHow Wisdom and Folly meet, mix and unite,\\nHow Virtue and Vice blend their black and\\ntheir white,\\nHow Genius, th illustrious father of fiction,\\nConfounds rule and law, reconciles contradic-\\ntion,\\nI write if these mortals the Critics should\\nbustle\\nI care not, not I let the Critics go whistle.\\nBurns.\\nTo present facts plainly a writer\\nmust be fearless and independent\\nnot prejudiced, but impressed with\\n7", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0011.jp2"}, "12": {"fulltext": "ANTI-CARNEGIE\\nwhat he knows of the subject of\\nwhich he treats. The subject of this\\nbook is Andrew Carnegie, born in\\nDunfermline, Scotland, over sixty\\nyears ago, and emigrated to America\\nfifty years ago. Is he to-day a loyal\\ncitizen of the United States Is he\\nan anti-expansionist and extremist\\nIs he a bundle of inconsistencies and\\ncontradictions After reading this\\nbook the public may answer these\\nqueries. The writer will simply fol-\\nlow Mr. Carnegie s example of free-\\ndom of speech, and show him as much\\nrespect as he has shown President\\nMcKinley dabble in his affairs as\\nhe has dabbled in the affairs of state.\\nAgitate him as he has agitated the", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0012.jp2"}, "13": {"fulltext": "SCRAPS AND COMMENTS\\npeople. Condemn his principles as\\nhe has condemned the principles and\\npolicy of the President quote as he\\nquotes that it is well sometimes\\nto see oursel s as others see us.\\nWe bow neither to his wealth nor to\\nhimself, but will treat him as a prob-\\nlem to be solved, as hard maybe as\\nthe Philippine problem.\\nThe nineteenth century about to\\nclose has been productive of mighty\\nchanges. England has advanced her\\nconquests in every quarter of the\\nglobe. The Christian powers of\\nEurope have been marking new\\nboundaries and seizing upon the ter-\\nritories of half-civilized or barbarous\\n9", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0013.jp2"}, "14": {"fulltext": "ANTI-CARNEGIE\\nraces, and America has grown from\\nits feeble colonial state to that of a\\nmighty Nation a nation among\\nnations. Among the changes of\\nthe nineteenth century, and by no\\nmeans the least, is the humiliation\\nof Spain. At the beginning she still\\nswayed her sceptre over an extent of\\nterritory nearly equal to the whole\\nof South America. As it was in the\\nold Roman dominion, her proconsuls\\nand their dependents were enriched\\nby the plunder of the provinces,\\nwhich, in turn, set up the standard\\nof rebellion. The Cubans struggled\\nlong to shake off the galling yoke,\\nbut it was left for Weyler to bring\\nmatters to a crisis. His policy was", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0014.jp2"}, "15": {"fulltext": "SCRAPS AND COMMENTS\\nto shut up the population in the\\ntowns, where they were rapidly\\nwasted by famine and disease. We\\nsympathized with them, but the\\nspirit of our people was not aroused\\nto active interference until Spanish\\ntreachery blew up one of our Gov-\\nernment vessels, the Maine, and\\nthereby destroyed many lives. Our\\ncountry was quick to act the strug-\\ngle was short and decisive victory\\nwas ours the Maine was avenged,\\nand Cuba is free.\\nPartyism had been hushed during\\nthe war, and the President of the\\nUnited States was loyally supported\\nby men of all parties and creeds.\\nBut when the war was over and the\\nii", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0015.jp2"}, "16": {"fulltext": "ANTI-CARNEGIE\\nwhite-robed angel of peace seemed\\nto abide with us again, and the thou-\\nsand isles, more or less, whose in-\\nhabitants had been in a chronic state\\nof insurrection were also free from\\nthe tyranny of Spain at this crisis,\\nbefore the peace treaty could be rati-\\nfied, a faction started up who pro-\\nclaimed themselves anti-imperialists.\\nThese boding owls would, if they\\ncould, delay the development of the\\nPhilippine Islands for a whole genera-\\ntion. In destroying the supremacy\\nof Spain in her colonies we incurred\\na grave responsibility, and the starry\\nflag would be disgraced in the sight\\nof all the world if we should follow\\nthe advice of the anti-imperialists, by\\n12", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0016.jp2"}, "17": {"fulltext": "SCRAPS AND COMMENTS\\nleaving the Philippines a prey to civil\\nwars, or foreign aggression, instead\\nof establishing over them a govern-\\nment adequate for their protection\\nagainst anarchy, and training them\\nin the paths of civilization and peace.\\nThe Filipinos must be subdued. But\\nin the meantime their aiders and\\nabettors, the anti-imperialists, must\\nnot be forgotten.\\nLet us compare the present state\\nof affairs with that which prevailed\\na few short months ago, when peace\\nprevailed. To-day intrigue, deep and\\nmysterious, is paving the way for\\nserious complications. The trouble is\\nnot between Republican and Demo-\\ncratic politicians, but there is some-\\n13", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0017.jp2"}, "18": {"fulltext": "ANTI-CARNEGIE\\nthing deeper, a strong undercurrent\\nthat is drawing in many unwary ones.\\nThe situation to-day has given that\\nundercurrent an opportunity to work\\nnot only in the dark but in the open.\\nDoes Andrew Carnegie advocate and\\nsupport legitimate authority Does\\nhe follow God s precepts Some\\nyears ago he said, What a man\\nowns is already subordinate in Amer-\\nica to what he knows, but in the final\\naristocracy the question will not be\\neither of these. It will not be asked,\\nWhere has he shown generosity or\\nself-abnegation when has he been a\\nfather to the fatherless where has\\nhe searched them out? How has he\\nworshipped God But the question\\n14", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0018.jp2"}, "19": {"fulltext": "SCRAPS AND COMMENTS\\non that day will be, What has he\\ndone for his fellows, how has he\\nserved man The end of aristoc-\\nracy appears to be a foregone con-\\nclusion. Andrew Carnegie is cer-\\ntainly carrying his anti-imperialism\\nvery far when he prefers to serve\\nman rather than God. Is it because\\nGod is a Sovereign, King of kings,\\nand has appointed kings and rulers\\nover man, to which Carnegie and his\\nfollowing are opposed\\nSome time before Mr. Carnegie\\nreturned to the United States he\\nmanaged to meet many foreigners\\nof high official position, with whom\\nhe freely discussed Government af-\\nfairs on this side of the water, and\\nis", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0019.jp2"}, "20": {"fulltext": "ANTI-CARNEGIE\\ngave his views in regard to the war\\nwith Spain and impending results.\\nThus encouraged to speak, they as\\nfully and freely expressed their views.\\nMr. Carnegie then felt it his duty to\\ncommunicate with the authorities at\\nWashington. As he said, I did not\\nfail in my duty to report to those\\nin authority at Washington what I\\nthought it behooved them to know.\\nHe wrote time and again, but those\\nin authority at Washington never\\nsaid a word, never gave a hint, and\\nas he did not succeed in worming out\\nany state secrets, it no doubt pre-\\nvented him from performing a simi-\\nlar duty to those powers in Europe\\nthat he says are so intensely against\\n16", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0020.jp2"}, "21": {"fulltext": "SCRAPS AND COMMENTS\\nour Government. From the strenu-\\nous efforts he has made to compel our\\nGovernment to give up the Philip-\\npines it looks as though he acted in\\nand for the interest of that dissatisfied\\nelement abroad, and had undertaken\\nto reverse the engine of progress and\\nprevent expansion of this country,\\nfor it is well known that he furnished\\nthe funds for the anti-expansion\\nleague. His present assumption of\\npower is in keeping with that he as-\\nsumed when a boy while in the em-\\nploy of Thomas A. Scott, who was\\nat that time superintendent of the\\nPennsylvania Railroad. Carnegie\\ntells it in the revised and improved\\nnarrative of his life.\\n2 17", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0021.jp2"}, "22": {"fulltext": "ANTI-CARNEGIE\\nOne morning Mr. Scott was a\\nlittle late getting to his office, and\\nAndrew Carnegie assumed the re-\\nsponsibility of sending out telegrams\\nin regard to the moving of trains,\\netc. Every telegram was signed\\nThomas A. Scott. When Mr. Scott\\narrived at his office and found what\\nthe boy had done he looked hard\\nat him, but did not say a word.\\nHe generously overlooked the of-\\nfence, but regarded the boy as a\\nprodigy of assurance and expansion.\\nAt Homestead, Pa., November 5,\\n1898, Mr. Carnegie began on impe-\\nrialism and declared himself opposed\\nto it. The people, without quite un-\\n18", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0022.jp2"}, "23": {"fulltext": "SCRAPS AND COMMENTS\\nderstanding what it meant, thought\\nthey were opposed to it also. Fi-\\nnally they began to look upon it as a\\ndread thing. Imperialism it meant\\nfor them, as presented by Mr. Carne-\\ngie, militarism, taxation, war, and\\nrumors of war, no work later some\\nof his employees took up the subject\\nand echoed his words. Carnegie was\\ndelighted he wrote to them from\\nNew York through the press and ex-\\npressed a desire to shake hands with\\nthem, and contemplated a visit to\\nPittsburg to do so.\\nHave you found this, or t other? There s\\nmore in the wind,\\nAs by one drunken fellow his comrades you ll\\nfind.\\n19", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0023.jp2"}, "24": {"fulltext": "ANTI-CARNEGIE\\nThe imperial ghost conjured up\\nbegan to assume such proportions,\\nto expand so, that at last it took tan-\\ngible form, shape. The confidence\\nthe people had reposed in President\\nMcKinley began to waver. Distrust,\\nsuspicion, and opposition to a pre-\\nsumed policy set the country in a\\nferment. Mr. Carnegie invaded the\\nExecutive Mansion and addressed\\nthe President, and after leaving his\\npresence said he hoped if the\\nAmerican soldiers attempted to take\\ncontrol of the Philippines that the\\ninsurgents would shoot them. He\\nthen announced his determination to\\nremain in Washington, and devote\\nhis time and means to accomplish", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0024.jp2"}, "25": {"fulltext": "SCRAPS AND COMMENTS\\nhis purpose. A Scotchman keeps\\nhis word. He remained in Washing-\\nton. How wrong his purpose was\\nmay be inferred from the fact that\\nhe selected for his advocate and\\nproxy a man who, he said, had\\nproved himself destitute of all moral\\nprinciples. Mr. Carnegie also, by\\nsome means, found a few congenial\\nspirits in the Senate and attached\\nhimself to them, and through them\\nsucceeded in giving expression to his\\nfeelings against President McKinley.\\nOne day in the Senate Chamber\\nexpectation stood on stilts in an-\\nticipation of a speech from Senator\\nMason. An article was read by\\nSenator Mason that smacked of Car-", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0025.jp2"}, "26": {"fulltext": "ANTI-CARNEGIE\\nnegie. Mason never let go his man-\\nuscript, but applied himself closely\\nto it he did not seem to be quite\\nfamiliar with it.\\nHe clenched his pamphlets in his fist,\\nHe quoted and he hinted,\\nTill in a declamation-mist.\\nHis argument he tint it.\\nHe gaped for t, he graped for t,\\nHe fand it was awa, man\\nBut what his common sense came short\\nHe eked it out wi law, man.\\nThe anti-imperialists became wild,\\nmurmurs of applause greeted the\\nSenator. Mr. Carnegie was present,\\na much interested listener, and later\\nmade the following remarks\\nThe ratification of the peace\\n22", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0026.jp2"}, "27": {"fulltext": "SCRAPS AND COMMENTS\\ntreaty may be defeated, and certainly\\ncan be if Mr. Bryan will come out in\\nopposition to it. If he will only\\nadvise his followers to fight in the\\npass and not in the open the treaty\\nis certain of defeat. All that I hear\\nindicates the increase of the opposi-\\ntion ranks, and I am quite encour-\\naged to believe the ratification of the\\ntreaty can be defeated. According\\nto my opinion this is the opportune\\ntime for those who oppose expansion\\nto do their work. Only a one-third\\nvote is required to defeat the treaty,\\nwhereas with the treaty ratified we\\nwill have to secure a majority to\\nmake our views effective. Hence I\\nsay that this is the time for Mr. Bryan\\n23", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0027.jp2"}, "28": {"fulltext": "ANTI-CARNEGIE\\nand other anti-expansionists to make\\ntheir fight. Hereafter we will not\\nenjoy the advantage over our op-\\nponents that we now do, having to\\nmeet them in the open field.\\nAndrew Carnegie has been sua--\\ngested by his friend J. H. B. as the\\nman to be placed in the United\\nStates Senate for various reasons.\\nFirst, He stands ready to champion\\nthe cause of the common people.\\nWhat cause The law is their\\nchampion when they need one. Sec-\\nond, No one has gone so deeply into\\nor opposed President McKinley and\\nstate affairs as Andrew Carnegie.\\nThird, ki That he will not scandalize\\nthe fair name of the State by looting", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0028.jp2"}, "29": {"fulltext": "SCRAPS AND COMMENTS\\nits financial institutions nor will it\\never become necessary for him to\\nshake the plum tree in order to fill\\nhis private purse. No but the\\ndanger is far greater. Should An-\\ndrew Carnegie be placed in the Sen-\\nate and devote his time and means\\nto run affairs according to his ideas,\\nthere would be danger of the Senate\\nbecoming Carnegie. A Greek phi-\\nlosopher (Plato) said We become\\nlike that which we contemplate.\\nCarnegie compels people to contem-\\nplate him, and he has contemplated\\nW. J. Bryan, with the inevitable re-\\nsult.\\nThough like as was ever twin-brother to brother,\\nPossessing the one shall imply you ve the other.\\n25", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0029.jp2"}, "30": {"fulltext": "ANTI-CARNEGIE\\nFor months we have been obliged\\nto read and re-read Jefferson in the\\nDeclaration of Independence. To\\nread and re-read Carnegie in the\\nspeeches of Hoar, Mason, Bryan,\\nand other lights. We have been\\nconfronted with the sayings of long-\\nago dead Presidents and statesmen,\\nmany of whose sayings were vague\\nand uncertain. And it is these say-\\nings the anti-expansionists quote and\\ntwist to suit themselves.\\nFaint echoes of the past, shall our\\nGovernment stop to listen and not\\nprogress? The doctrines of Jeffer-\\nson and Monroe, the principles of\\none hundred years ago, are presented\\nas the guiding star for President\\n26", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0030.jp2"}, "31": {"fulltext": "SCRAPS AND COMMENTS\\nMcKinley to follow. Let us briefly\\nreview Jefferson s principles and\\npolitics.\\nAs an adroit politician and organ-\\nizer he stood without a rival; his\\nmanagement of persons and events\\nfor the accomplishment of the end\\nat which he aimed was considered\\nmasterly. When a young man,\\nonly thirty-three years old, he drew\\nup the Declaration of Independence.\\nAt that time there was no system in\\ngovernment the Republic was in its\\ninfancy, trying to stand alone, but it\\ndid not stand still. Jefferson was\\nelected President of the United\\nStates in 1801 he was popular with\\nthe people for the reason that he\\n27", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0031.jp2"}, "32": {"fulltext": "ANTI-CARNEGIE\\nopposed strong government he de-\\nclared the world was governed too\\nmuch. He was an extremist, a man\\nof imagination any innovation or\\nnovelty appealed to his nature. In\\nthe face of threatened dangers from\\nabroad, while he was President, he\\nwas timid, hesitating, and inade-\\nquate. As war governor of Virginia\\nhe was a failure. In quoting Jeffer-\\nson the anti-expansionists ignore the\\nfact that Jefferson was an expansion-\\nist, that he purchased Louisiana from\\nFrance, and that Monroe negotiated\\nfor the purchase. What would\\nAmerica be to-day but for expan-\\nsion through purchase of terri-\\ntory?\\n28", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0032.jp2"}, "33": {"fulltext": "SCRAPS AND COMMENTS\\nWhy should an individual who has\\nexpanded to the extent Andrew Car-\\nnegie has, array himself against our\\nGovernment, demand that it stand\\nstill, expand no farther? If Carnegie\\nkeeps on expanding there is danger\\nof Uncle Sam being called Uncle\\nCarnegie, irrespective of the fact\\nthat the records of Allegheny County\\nfail to show him to be a naturalized\\ncitizen of the United States. A\\nleading paper, the Daily News, of\\nPittsburg, has what may be called a\\nbureau of information, which aims to\\nsolve all mysteries, even at the ex-\\npense of a world of labor and pains.\\nIn its issue of February 16th of the\\npresent year it gives a full and com-\\n29", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0033.jp2"}, "34": {"fulltext": "ANTI-CARNEGIE\\nplete answer to a correspondent who\\nasked Is Mr. Carnegie a citizen\\nof the United States in the legal\\nsense of the term It appears that\\nMr. Carnegie had given out the in-\\nformation that his father was natu-\\nralized in 1853 and died soon after,\\nadding, His naturalization while I\\nwas a minor makes me an American\\ncitizen. Yet, for all his saying,\\nafter a thorough examination of the\\nrecords of all the courts in which this\\nnaturalization could have taken place,\\nthe only entry in which the name of\\nCarnegie appears was an application\\nby William Carnegie dated Novem-\\nber 20, 1854, and as his death is\\nrecorded in the Allegheny Cemetery\\n3\u00c2\u00b0", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0034.jp2"}, "35": {"fulltext": "SCRAPS AND COMMENTS\\nas having taken place October 2,\\n1855, less than one year after his ap-\\nplication for citizenship, it was clearly\\nimpossible for him to have been nat-\\nuralized, as his two years of proba-\\ntion had not expired when he died.\\nIf Andrew Carnegie labors under the\\ndelusion that he is an American citi-\\nzen it would be well for him to in-\\nform the public when, where, and\\nhow he acquired that citizenship, or\\nat least when he took the oath of\\nallegiance. And yet this man, with-\\nout ever having taken the precaution\\nto clear his record, and prove his\\nright to the electoral franchise, has\\nthe sublime assurance to force his\\nadvice on the President of the United\\n31", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0035.jp2"}, "36": {"fulltext": "ANTI-CARNEGIE\\nStates, and instruct him how to ad-\\nminister the orovernment.\\nb\\nWhat is the state of the Filipinos\\nto-day Is it the savage state Do\\nthe anti-imperialists object to their\\nbeing brought into a civilized state\\nMr. Carnegie is upholding the views\\nheld nearly two hundred years ago\\nby Jean Jacques Rousseau, who main-\\ntained that the natural and proper\\nstate of man is the savage state, when\\nhe possesses complete liberty, that\\nall men are born equal. Rousseau s\\nviews on the subject paved the way\\nfor the first French Revolution.\\nHow the words all men are\\ncreated equal are used to mislead\\n33", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0036.jp2"}, "37": {"fulltext": "SCRAPS AND COMMENTS\\nthe masses No one explains to them\\nthat in this free land it means that\\nall are born with equal rights, and if\\nthey have intelligence, ambition, and\\nability, they can aspire to any goal\\nand attain it. The majority of the\\nmasses look upon it as social equality\\nto which they aspire, and are thereby\\nmisled by agitators and Socialists\\nwho never would practise what they\\npreach, but they want to draw the\\nmasses to vote as they desire.\\nWhat are the imported anti-mon-\\narchists doing for or against this\\ncountry to-day They are arrayed\\nin opposition to legitimate estab-\\nlished government authority. The\\nSocialists of to-day are organizing on\\n3 33", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0037.jp2"}, "38": {"fulltext": "ANTI-CARNEGIE\\nthe ruins of the Populist party, and\\nare paving the way for revolution.\\nSocialists are in the Senate and stand-\\ning at the door waiting to grasp\\npower to advance Socialism and de-\\nstroy representative government.\\nWhy are Carnegie and Bryan so op-\\nposed to militarism insisting that\\nthe Government depend on the peo-\\nple in time of need rather than to\\nany extent on the* professional sol-\\ndier Why In time of need the\\nGovernment can always depend on\\nthe professional soldier and loyal\\ncitizens the Socialists depend on the\\nmasses, therefore they are opposed\\nto a large standing army.\\nW. J. Bryan said, Militarism is a\\n34", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0038.jp2"}, "39": {"fulltext": "SCRAPS AND COMMENTS\\nnecessary companion of imperialism,\\nand objects to it on the ground that\\nit gives the aristocracy and privi-\\nleged classes an increased influence\\nin government, and adds, They are\\npotent enough already. Now what\\nreason has he to condemn aristoc-\\nracy An aristocrat cannot help\\nbeing born an aristocrat; he must live\\nand die one. All the aristocrats are\\nnot wealthy, and all the wealthy are\\nnot aristocrats. The born aristocrat\\ncannot be confounded with the\\nwealthy imitators. So aristocracy is\\na weak argument to present against\\nmilitarism. With the increased ob-\\nligations of this nation a large stand-\\ning army is necessary, irrespective of\\n35", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0039.jp2"}, "40": {"fulltext": "ANTI-CARNEGIE\\nthe money it may cost. What do\\nthe opponents of militarism care for\\nthe taxation of the people They\\nhave other and deeper reasons for\\ntheir opposition. The following ex-\\ntract from a Populist paper (the\\nSouthern Mercury, March 16, 1899)\\nsays of W. J. Bryan Much that\\nMr. Bryan says in his speeches, the\\neditor of this paper commends as\\ngood Populist doctrine. In so far\\nwe agree, but differ as to the methods\\nto be employed to incorporate these\\nviews and ideas into the laws of the\\nland. Mr. Bryan thinks that this can\\nbe done through the Democratic\\nparty. The editor of the Mercury is\\nnot quite so confident on this point.\\n36", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0040.jp2"}, "41": {"fulltext": "SCRAPS AND COMMENTS\\nWhat theory do Carnegie and\\nBryan advocate The answer lies\\nin the definition of anarchy, which is,\\nAbsence or insufficience of govern-\\nment, social and political confusion\\nowing to the want of strong control-\\nling power. Andrew Carnegie s\\nanti-annexation letter was sent to the\\nagricultural periodicals for publica-\\ntion and editorial comment, to be\\npaid for at the usual rates. That is\\nrather significant, as during the Coxey\\ncraze the farmers were arming and\\ndrilling, particularly in and about\\nMichigan. The agricultural paper\\nis the medium to reach the farmer.\\nMr. Carnegie s violent opposition\\n37", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0041.jp2"}, "42": {"fulltext": "ANTI-CARNEGIE\\nto the Administration caused wide-\\nspread comment and conjecture, par-\\nticularly when he announced his in-\\ntention of remaining in Washington\\nand personally conducting a cam-\\npaign against the Administration,\\ndevoting his time and means to\\nthat end. Has he not carried out\\nthe social theory that every man\\nshould be a state official? Has he\\nnot acted as one of the Senate\\nHas he not advised and dictated to\\nthe President Has he not caused\\ndisorder and confusion Have not\\nthe anti-imperialists caused the Fili-\\npinos to mistrust our Government\\nDo they not advocate the worst social\\ntheory Collusion between some of\\n38", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0042.jp2"}, "43": {"fulltext": "SCRAPS AND COMMENTS\\nthe anti-imperialist and Filipino lead-\\ners resulted in the insurgents attack\\non the American soldiers stationed\\nat Manila. Do not the Filipino\\nleaders need Christian civilized gov-\\nernment They sacrifice human life\\nas indifferently as Nero did.\\nAt Boston, February 16, 1899,\\nPresident McKinley delivered an ad-\\ndress before the Home Market Club\\nthat convinced many doubting ones\\nall over the country that imperialism\\nin connection with America was only\\na myth. He demonstrated clearly\\nthat the present policy must conform\\nto the situation until the situation\\nshall conform to a policy which\\n39", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0043.jp2"}, "44": {"fulltext": "ANTI-C VRNEGIE\\nevents and future developments will\\ndecide. To-day the world is im-\\npressed with President McKinley s\\nwisdom and management of public\\naffairs. His success so far and con-\\nfidence that in the end all will be\\nwell is contagious. Only the few,\\nwhose personal dislike is inflamed by\\nthe dignified and unwavering course\\npursued by President McKinley, still\\nhurl their poisoned arrows at him.\\nWhile articles appeared in all the\\nleading papers expressing admiration\\nand approval of the President s Bos-\\nton speech, lo an anti-McKinley\\narticle was published, signed Andrew\\nCarnegie, in which he said that the\\nPhilippines were not the result of\\n40", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0044.jp2"}, "45": {"fulltext": "SCRAPS AND COMMENTS\\nconquest of war, but the President s\\nown Pandora box. In writing that\\narticle it is strange that\\nOne trifling particular, truth, should have\\nmissed him.\\nAbout the same time a violent and\\nabusive article against President Mc-\\nKinley was read by Johnson in the\\nHouse. Reading from manuscript\\nwas contrary to his usual custom, and\\nas there was no occasion for the out-\\nbreak the House was mystified.\\nIn another article written by An-\\ndrew Carnegie and published in the\\nNorth American Review, March,\\n1899, he insults our brave American\\nsoldiers. Mr. Carnegie should not\\n41", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0045.jp2"}, "46": {"fulltext": "ANTI-CARNEGIE\\npresage and contemplate, and by\\nthese tactics force others to contem-\\nplate, what he imagines the conduct\\nof the American soldiers will be. He\\nseems to think the army quite im-\\nmoral. He says that soldiers in\\nforeign camps require missionaries\\nthemselves more than the natives.\\nWhat a fine opinion he has of Amer-\\nican soldiers. But he cannot under-\\nstand how men can be brave, true,\\nunselfish, and love their country\\nenough to serve it such feelings are\\nforeign to his nature. But there is\\na freedom, cruelty and liberty about\\nthe savage state that appeals to his\\nnature. He says the Filipinos\\nhave just the same feelings we have.\\n42", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0046.jp2"}, "47": {"fulltext": "SCRAPS AND COMMENTS\\nIf they have the same feelings we\\nhave why do they not want civiliza-\\ntion In the March number of the\\nNorth American Review Carnegie\\nwrites: Travelling in Southern India\\none day I was taken into the coun-\\ntry. The adults working in a grove,\\nmen and women, had each a rag\\nround their loins, but the boys and\\ngirls, with their black, glossy skins,\\nwere free of all encumbrance. This\\nhappy people wondered why we did\\nnot come and enjoy life in their\\nfavored clime, and adds, It is just\\nso with the Filipinos to-day. It is\\nastonishing how much all human\\nbeings the world round are alike in\\ntheir essentials. He says the\\n43", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0047.jp2"}, "48": {"fulltext": "ANTI-CARNEGIE\\nFilipinos prefer their own civiliza-\\ntion. Are they civilized They are\\nnot, and could not be under Spanish\\nrule and tyranny, and although that\\nyoke has been lifted, read what Car-\\nnegie says in the North American\\nReview, March number\\nAre the broad liberty-loving and\\nnoble liberty-giving principles of\\nAmericanism as proclaimed by Presi-\\ndent Lincoln to be discarded for the\\nnarrow liberty-denying, race-subject-\\ning, imperialism of President Mc-\\nKinley? Never had this nation\\ngreater cause to extol Abraham\\nLincoln than on this ninetieth anni-\\nversary of his birth, and never till\\nto-day had it cause to lament that a\\n44", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0048.jp2"}, "49": {"fulltext": "SCRAPS AND COMMENTS\\nsuccessor in the Presidential chair\\nshould attempt to subvert his teach-\\ning;\\nIs it any wonder that blood is\\nbeing shed to-day, when the Filipinos\\nare thus led to believe that President\\nMcKinley wants to make slaves of\\nthem But the war, with its wide-\\nspreading desolation, we hope will\\nsoon be over. But many human\\nbeings, the Christian soldiers, and\\nthe ignorant half-civilized braves, are\\nlying in their graves many mothers\\nare mourning for their sons, hus-\\nbands, and brothers, and why Be-\\ncause the Filipinos believed the lie\\nthat their false friends, the anti-im-\\nperialist leaders, told them, that they\\n45", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0049.jp2"}, "50": {"fulltext": "ANTI-CARNEGIE\\nwere to be made slaves, and they\\nfought for the freedom that they\\nknew not was theirs. The Filipinos\\nissued a proclamation in which are\\nthese words We will fight to the\\ndeath. Coming generations will pray\\nover our graves, shedding tears of\\ngratitude for their freedom. No\\none believes that Andrew Carnegie\\nfor one instant believes what he as-\\nserts about the Filipinos being made\\nslaves. There is not a sane man in\\nAmerica ignorant enough to believe\\nsuch a thing.\\nMr. Carnegie has made frantic\\nappeals to the pulpit to preach anti-\\nimperialism. He speaks of the de-\\ncline of the pulpit on theological\\n46", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0050.jp2"}, "51": {"fulltext": "SCRAPS AND COMMENTS\\nquestions, etc. Having won over a\\nfew of the unfaithful to his side has\\nnot increased his respect for the\\npulpit.\\n14 Some, having swerved, have\\nturned aside unto vain jangling.\\nDesiring to be teachers of the\\nlaw understanding neither what\\nthey say, nor whereof they affirm.\\nAmong these a New York divine,\\nwho received W. J. Bryan on the\\nSabbath day to discuss politics with\\nhim. These preachers, instead of\\nupholding the President and assist-\\ning him with their prayers and in-\\nfluence to bear the heavy burdens\\nimposed upon him by the war, are,\\nwith Carnegie and others, doing all\\n47", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0051.jp2"}, "52": {"fulltext": "ANTI-CARNEGIE\\nthey can to hamper him in the dis-\\ncharge of his duties. A weak or\\ncorrupt administration would have\\nsettled the Philippine question long\\nago to the entire satisfaction of Mr.\\nCarnegie and his following, but to\\nthe eternal disgrace of our country.\\nMr. Carnegie s advice to the pul-\\npit was discussed in a patriotic man-\\nner by Rev. Dr. E. M. Wood, an\\neminent Pittsburg divine. Dr. Wood\\nsaid\\nOfficers of the general Govern-\\nment and all public functionaries who\\nadminister wisely should be sustained\\nby all good citizens, and when their\\nadministration is maligned they\\nshould be defended. It is not often\\n48", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0052.jp2"}, "53": {"fulltext": "SCRAPS AND COMMENTS\\nin times of national peace that one\\ncan find a more pronounced case of\\nthe abuse of high public officials\\nthan that recently by Mr. Carnegie.\\nHe speaks of the President as mili-\\ntary dictator and war lord, as one\\nlikely to pass into history as a re-\\ncreant governed by the dictation of\\nforeign rivals without hesitation, and\\ndoubts whether he had convictions\\nupon any subject.\\nBut Mr. Carnegie does not spare\\nthe President s honored Secretary, a\\nman who filled the arduous duties of\\nhis responsible office at the Court\\nof St. James with such pronounced\\nability as to be recognized as one of\\nthe first diplomats of this age. Yet\\n4 49", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0053.jp2"}, "54": {"fulltext": "ANTI-CARNEGIE\\nMr. Carnegie says: He has made a\\npardonable mistake, since he has had\\nno experience of commerce. And\\nmore. Mr. Carnegie spares no one\\nwhen he says the men in Washing-\\nton to-day are so immersed in prob-\\nlems which have nothing whatever\\nto do with the prosperity of their\\nown country that they have no time\\nto consider subjects bearing upon it.\\nThey have eaten of the insane root\\nof territorial expansion in distant con-\\ntinents they are dreaming dreams\\nand chasing phantoms.\\nAnd now are not such expressions\\nasufficient justification of the Chicago\\nRecord s saying Mr. Carnegie has\\nlost his head And we have not\\n50", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0054.jp2"}, "55": {"fulltext": "SCRAPS AND COMMENTS\\nmentioned all that could be quoted.\\nOne more, however, will be sufficient.\\nIn case the United States is com-\\npelled to use force in pacifying the\\nisland of Cuba, in that case, says Mr.\\nCarnegie, I would be glad to see\\nthe insurgents begin shooting. Such\\na statement is most revolutionary and\\nunpatriotic, and especially so when\\nthe military forces of the country\\nhave so often been called upon to\\nprotect his own property.\\nBut Mr. Carnegie complains be-\\ncause the pulpit shows any interest\\nin the Filipinos when he says Why\\ndoesn t the pulpit recognize its duty\\nto those whom it hath seen, rather\\nthan pretend to love those whom it\\nSi", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0055.jp2"}, "56": {"fulltext": "ANTI-CARNEGIE\\nhath not seen, contrary to Scripture?\\nAs ministers, we claim that it is more\\nthan a pretend in us and our\\npeople to be deeply interested in\\nforeign missions, and if Mr. Carnegie\\nwill show the public where he has\\nmade liberal contributions to purely\\ncharitable institutions or home mis-\\nsionary work he will stand in a better\\nlight than he does now before the\\npublic.\\nBut Mr. Carnegie is on record as\\nbeing opposed to the cession of the\\nPhilippine Islands to the United\\nStates.\\nA man to be consistent should in\\nevery way conform to his proclaimed\\n52", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0056.jp2"}, "57": {"fulltext": "SCRAPS AND COMMENTS\\nprinciples. What difference is there\\nin outward pomp and show between\\nAndrew Carnegie and a king What\\nbelongs to one by heritage the other\\nacquires by purchase. Andrew Car-\\nnegie calls himself an anti-imperial-\\nist. But Skibo Castle and town of\\nSkibo belong to him by purchase he\\nimitates in every way what he con-\\ndemns and buys all he can of it. In\\nPittsburg on Founders Day, No-\\nvember 3, 1898, he played sovereign\\nbehind closed doors. Every door of\\nthe building free to the people\\nwas guarded by police to keep out\\nthe people. One of the people\\nmanaged to pass the police. She\\nwanted\\n53", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0057.jp2"}, "58": {"fulltext": "ANTI-CARNEGIE\\nTo watch the symptoms o the Great,\\nThe gentle pride, the lordly state,\\nThe arrogant assuming.\\nBut she was quickly ejected by the\\npolice inside. Only a woman had\\nthe courage to attempt such a feat.\\nIt was high treason, and she had\\ncause to be thankful that she was\\nnot punished for contempt of police.\\nLate in the afternoon the people\\nwere permitted to enter the presence\\nof Mr. Carnegie for a short time,\\nafter the police had seen the aristo-\\ncrats safely into their carriages. Mr.\\nCarnegie, without their knowledge,\\nhad guarded them from the people.\\nThe crowd of people on that occa-\\nsion was not so great, but the num-\\n54", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0058.jp2"}, "59": {"fulltext": "SCRAPS AND COMMENTS\\nber of police was. Every step you\\ntook they glared at you, they trod\\nupon your heels. Was it a body-\\nguard or lack of confidence in the\\npeople to conduct themselves prop-\\nerly With his proclaimed ideas on\\nequality he should not, particularly\\non Founders Day, have made any\\ndistinction, but should alike have\\nreceived the general public. Some\\nparties passing through Pittsburg on\\nthat day had remained over to see the\\nfamed picture presented by Mr. Frick\\nto the Carnegie Art Gallery. They\\nstood outside with the people. On\\ngaining admittance they hastened to\\nfind the picture, but on reaching the\\nspot Mr. Carnegie was in evidence.\\n55", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0059.jp2"}, "60": {"fulltext": "ANTI-CARNEGIE\\nHe stood before the picture of Christ,\\nand was receiving the people there.\\nMany workingmen at Carnegie s\\nmills complain and protest against\\nbeing compelled to work on the Sab-\\nbath day. They hear the music from\\nthe Carnegie organs, while click,\\nclack, click, clack go the mills, grind-\\ning out wealth for Carnegie, grind-\\ning the very life and joy out of the\\nhearts of the brave toilers. Andrew\\nCarnegie s sympathies are so occu-\\npied with the Filipinos, and his\\naggressiveness towards President\\nMcKinley is so great, that he has\\nforgotten the assertion he made that\\ncharity should begin at home and\\nalso end at home.\\n56", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0060.jp2"}, "61": {"fulltext": "SCRAPS AND COMMENTS\\nWho are the fellows he claims\\nhe is doing so much for Who are\\nthe men he claims to serve\\nSurely he is not doing anything for\\nour respected citizens, the working-\\nmen. He is not giving the mill men\\nan opportunity to cultivate their\\ntalents, among whom are many dia-\\nmonds in the rough. With Car-\\nnegie s superfluous wealth, why does\\nhe not show some appreciation of\\nthem rather than waste his time,\\nmeans and sympathies on the Fili-\\npinos, who have a champion in our\\nhumane and Christian President?\\nWhat time have the mill men to\\nbenefit by the Carnegie libraries?\\nWhat time have they on Saturdays,\\n57", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0061.jp2"}, "62": {"fulltext": "ANTI-CARNEGIE\\nbefore the evening meal, to change\\ntheir soiled garments for fresh ap-\\nparel, which is so essential to health\\nand comfort They need rest, they\\nhave home duties, and should have\\nsome pleasure and recreation also.\\nLet Andrew Carnegie set the exam-\\nple, and be content to make less\\nmoney. Let the mills close on Sat-\\nurdays at noon. On God s day let\\nthe noisy wheels be still. Let the\\nmen be paid so they will not feel that\\nSunday is a day lost, but a day\\ngained. How can men who are only\\nhalf fed on poor food have brain\\npower and strength to endure con-\\nstant toil Constant motion wears\\nout machinery, even when well oiled.\\n58", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0062.jp2"}, "63": {"fulltext": "SCRAPS AND COMMENTS\\nAs miasma arises from low, swampy\\nland, so a dangerous element arises\\nfrom poverty, hunger, and want.\\nSome eood and true articles have\\nrecently been written by some Popu-\\nlists who are really and truly sincere\\nin their appeals for their fellow\\nmen. But organized charity and\\ncombines have greatly increased their\\nbitterness. They sneer at the phi-\\nlanthropy that rears magnificent edi-\\nfices with money that should rather\\nbe paid in good living wages to the\\ntoilers. The philanthropy of vanity\\nand egotism that builds its monu-\\nments while it lives, that lacks even\\nthe politeness of the posthumous\\nTartuffe, whose etiquette bade him\\n59", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0063.jp2"}, "64": {"fulltext": "ANTI-CARNEGIE\\nwait till he was dead before he be-\\ncame offensive.\\nMr. Carnegie says the gospel he\\nhas preached, and will preach while\\nhe lives, is that for a man to die\\nrich is to die disgraced. These\\nwords he has said and re-said. But\\nwe say that the day will come when\\nthe word disgraced will echo and\\nre-echo back to himself, disgraced.\\nHe\\nLooks o er proud property extended wide,\\nAnd eyes the simple rustic hind\\nWhose toil upholds the glitt ring show,\\nA creature of another kind.\\nCan Mr. Carnegie die poor Each\\nyear he gives his wife a fortune in\\nmoney and property. Does he live\\n60", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0064.jp2"}, "65": {"fulltext": "SCRAPS AND COMMENTS\\nwithout ostentation It is said that\\nin his castle over the sea fifty ser-\\nvants wait to do his bidding. Every\\nmorning an organ peals out soft\\nstrains to waken him from his slum-\\nber, etc. Mr. Carnegie has said that\\nthe epitaph to which every rich\\nman should wish himself entitled\\nis that seen on the monument of\\nPitt\\nHe Lived without Ostentation and\\nHe Died Poor.\\nWhy does Mr. Carnegie announce\\nthat he means to die poor What\\nis his motive Why does he try to\\nmislead the people and pretend to\\nbe in sympathy with them Not\\n61", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0065.jp2"}, "66": {"fulltext": "ANTI-CARNEGIE\\none of them could even gain admis-\\nsion to his presence. He only re-\\nceives and associates with aristocrats\\nand plutocrats.\\nAnd now, after all the trouble An-\\ndrew Carnegie has caused by remain-\\ning in Washington and has had his\\nwish gratified, that the American sol-\\ndiers would be shot by the insur-\\ngents, he proposes to rear to himself\\na monument, a free library, in Wash-\\nington, where he has carried on war-\\nfare against the President of the\\nUnited States, and he asks that a\\nsite be furnished, and that Congress\\nappropriate $10,000 a year to main-\\ntain it. That means taxation for the\\n62", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0066.jp2"}, "67": {"fulltext": "SCRAPS AND COMMENTS\\npeople. But in these days, when\\neducation is compulsory and books\\nare so cheap that they are within the\\nreach of all who wish to read, why\\ndoes Mr. Carnegie put such vast\\nsums in magnificent buildings and\\nspeak against the expenditure of\\nmoney in behalf of human beings\\nwhom God has cast at our very feet,\\nthat they may be lifted up from\\ndegradation to civilization, that they\\nmay become a higher order of beings\\nBut if we must have free libraries\\nlet them be revised and improved.\\nLet a certain number of books be\\ngiven to applicants each year, books\\nthat will cultivate and improve the\\nmind. From a sanitary point of\\n63", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0067.jp2"}, "68": {"fulltext": "ANTI-CARNEGIE\\nview the promiscuous circulation of\\nbooks should be condemned, and in\\ntime will be. Only the few know\\nwhat unwholesome quarters the\\nbooks go to and return from. On\\nvisiting at the house of a poor family\\nthe first thing that caught the eye,\\non entering the bare, cheerless room,\\nwas a bunch of flowers from the\\nPhipps Conservatory an old broken\\npitcher held the flowers, the only\\nbright thing in the room. A kind\\nneighbor who was employed at the\\nconservatory had brought them to a\\nyoung girl who was suffering from\\ntuberculosis. On her lap lay a book\\nbrought by another friend from the\\nCarnegie Library. The girl s cold\\n64", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0068.jp2"}, "69": {"fulltext": "SCRAPS AND COMMENTS\\nmoist hands lay on the open book.\\nBut enough\\nMany marvel how Mr. Carnegie\\ncan enjoy his wealth knowing how\\nmany poor old people there are who\\nhave no one to support or do for\\nthem, nor money to admit them to\\nthe home for the aged. The poor-\\nhouse being a horror to them, they\\nmust either beg or starve. A little\\nstory will illustrate only one of many.\\nA father and mother, who were grow-\\ning old, depended on an only son\\nfor support. But he died, and the\\npoor old woman had to seek some\\nmeans of support for her crippled\\nhusband and herself. For years she\\ncarried a little basket of matches\\n5 65", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0069.jp2"}, "70": {"fulltext": "ANTI-CARNEGIE\\nfrom house to house her feet weary\\nwhen she returned to the poor old\\nman, who always eagerly watched\\nfor her return. For years all through\\nthe spring, through the hot summer\\nand fall we saw her, but last fall she\\ncame not. But one chill day, as if\\nin answer to thoughts that were of\\nher, she came. The little basket lay\\nempty at home, and for the first time\\nshe asked for charity. The gray\\nhair streamed over her face, blown\\nthere by the blustering wind, and a\\ntear lay on the withered cheek. The\\nsnow from the thin scarf around her\\nhead melted, dropped, and mingled\\nwith the tear. And as she looked at\\nthe happy maid, laughing boy, and\\n66", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0070.jp2"}, "71": {"fulltext": "SCRAPS AND COMMENTS\\ncontented mistress, a look of pain\\npassed over her face. Did she think\\nof her boy, her promise, and wonder\\nhow they could be so happy, and\\nshe\\nSae weary, fu o care\\nWe know not. She only asked for\\nfood, and clothing to keep them\\nwarm at night, and said It will not\\nbe for long that we will want for food\\nand warmth, for we have prayed God\\nto take us and we think that he\\nwill take us at the same time and\\nsoon.\\nI m kneeling on the threshold,\\nWeary, faint, and sore,\\nWaiting for the dawning,\\nFor the op ning of the door.\\n67", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0071.jp2"}, "72": {"fulltext": "ANTI-CARNEGIE\\nWaiting till the Master\\nShall bid me rise and come,\\nTo the glory of His Presence,\\nTo the gladness of His home.\\nA weary path I ve travelled\\nMid darkness, storm, and strife,\\nBearing many a burden,\\nStruggling for my life.\\nBut the dawn is breaking\\nMy toil will soon be o er\\nI m kneeling on the threshold,\\nMy hand is on the door.\\nWhy does not Andrew Carnegie\\nbuild free homes for old people in-\\nstead of libraries for those who do\\nnot need them But his motto is\\nonly to help those who help them-\\nselves. How can helpless old peo-\\nple help themselves He has erected\\n68", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0072.jp2"}, "73": {"fulltext": "SCRAPS AND COMMENTS\\nmany buildings, but there is not one\\ncharitable institution among them.\\nOur American millionaires, and\\neven those who are only compara-\\ntively wealthy, give much each year\\nto charity, but they give it without\\nostentation or conditions. If they\\ncared to build edifices to perpetuate\\ntheir names without a trace of char-\\nity, they would be as notorious as\\nMr. Carnegie, who has stated that\\napplications for charity never reach\\nhim. It is true, for he protects him-\\nself he is like the rich old woman\\nin a child s story book of long ago,\\nwho kept all applicants for assistance\\nfrom reaching her door by beating\\nthem off with a broom. The young\\n69", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0073.jp2"}, "74": {"fulltext": "ANTT-CARNEGIE\\nmen and widows who humble them-\\nselves to ask Carnegie for a small\\namount to start themselves in busi-\\nness are alike driven away, and go\\ntheir way disappointed, hopeless, and\\nwretched. Would Carnegie have the\\nwealth he has to-day had the helping\\nhand been refused to him when the\\ntide in his affairs came But the\\nCarnegie buildings, costing hundreds\\nof thousands, are still going up\\neverywhere all over the land, and\\nthis anti-imperial agitator is honored\\nand made much of for the wealth he\\nhas accumulated, for the wealth that\\nonly goes from his coffers to be\\nstamped Carnegie. Many people\\nthink he should not build any more\\n70", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0074.jp2"}, "75": {"fulltext": "SCRAPS AND COMMENTS\\nlibraries than he can endow, as the\\npeople have to be taxed to maintain\\nthem. Even in Pittsburg, where his\\npet library is located at Schenley\\nPark, the city has been compelled to\\nappropriate many thousands above\\nthe amount first called for. It is now\\nestimated that in a little over three\\nyears the annual appropriation for\\nthis object amounts to $104,000, and\\nfrom $500,000 to $1,000,000 must be\\nfurnished by the city to purchase\\nenough additional land to provide a\\nsuitable site for the proposed annex,\\nand the party who made the estimate\\ntruthfully remarks, that with the\\nexpense of sustaining the additional\\nbuildings Mr. Carnegie proposes to\\n71", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0075.jp2"}, "76": {"fulltext": "ANTI-CARNEGIE\\nerect, it would soon become an un-\\nendurable incubus to the taxpayers.\\nMany taxpayers do not know what\\na large amount they have to pay for\\nCarnegie s free libraries. The citi-\\nzens of Atlanta, Ga., were much sur-\\nprised when Mr. Carnegie offered\\nthem a library. In speaking of that\\ngift, he said I have been pleased\\nno little lately to notice the pub-\\nlic spirit of that community; how\\nstrongly in support of the Ameri-\\ncan Constitution those people are,\\nand how in accord with the senti-\\nments of Washington s farewell ad-\\ndress warning us against entangle-\\nments with foreign nations. The\\npatriotism displayed by the people of\\n72", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0076.jp2"}, "77": {"fulltext": "SCRAPS AND COMMENTS\\nthe South at the Atlanta peace jubilee\\nwas notable. I have observed these\\nthings, and I felt that I would like\\nto help those people if I could. I\\nhad some correspondence with our\\nagent at Atlanta concerning the li-\\nbrary there. Then I determined to\\ngive a building for their library if\\nthe city would agree to appropriate\\n$5,000 annually for its maintenance.\\nI never give anything for nothing.\\nIt is my faith to help those who help\\nthemselves. The Atlanta people\\nagreed to do this, and I went into\\ncopartnership with the city of At-\\nlanta.\\nCarnegie s motive in giving a li-\\nbrary to Atlanta is patent. President\\n73", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0077.jp2"}, "78": {"fulltext": "ANTI-CARNEGIE\\nMcKinley s speech to the people of\\nAtlanta made such a favorable im-\\npression that Carnegie hoped by the\\ngift to counteract it. He conveys\\nto them the impression that they\\nare and must be anti-imperialists.\\nThat is what he requires of them\\nfor the gift.\\nFrom an article published in the\\nNew York World, May 13, 1899,\\nover the signature of Andrew Car-\\nnegie, we extract the following I\\nhave seen many of the most prom-\\ninent public men now in London\\nwho I know have been friends of\\nthe American Republic when it has\\nneeded friends. From highest to\\nlowest, without exception, they have\\n74", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0078.jp2"}, "79": {"fulltext": "SCRAPS AND COMMENTS\\nmet me with expressions of deep\\nregret that the Republic founded by\\nWashington and his colleagues upon\\nplanes so much higher than any other\\nstate should have fallen to the level\\nof the military states of Europe. An\\nalliance with the Republic is now the\\nkeynote of British policy, and wisely\\nso. But not alliance with our present\\nindustrial Republic. Our present\\nwar lord only makes himself ridicu-\\nlous in the eyes of these statesmen,\\nwith three battleships at his back and\\nonly 40,000 soldiers, strutting like a\\npeacock, as vain and just as harmless.\\nNo it is not the present industrial\\nRepublic that England wishes to\\nhave as her ally it is the Republic\\n75", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0079.jp2"}, "80": {"fulltext": "ANTI-CARNEGIE:\\nthat England sees America must\\nbecome if she does not soon reverse\\nher policy in regard to the Philip-\\npines.\\nWe must have a tremendous\\nnavy and a huge standing army, for\\nBritain judges truly that into what-\\never enterprise the Republic goes\\nshe will not be content very long to\\nplay second fiddle. She is now only\\nthe cat s-paw of England. She could\\nnot maintain her position for a day\\nin Manila if England withdrew her\\naugust protection.\\n11 This is the humiliating position.\\nIt makes my blood boil as I speak of\\nthe recreant President who is the\\nsole cause of it. He it was who\\n76", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0080.jp2"}, "81": {"fulltext": "SCRAPS AND COMMENTS\\nchanged his mind and demanded the\\nPhilippines against the advice and\\nwishes of most of his colleagues.\\nWill the President permit the sacri-\\nfice of the lives of our soldiers much\\nlonger in a futile effort to conquer\\n1,200 islands that would not stay\\nconquered if beaten\\nSuch is the position as viewed\\nfrom London.\\nYou ask my personal views of\\nthe future. I answer, President\\nMcKinley will not be allowed by the\\nmanagers of the Republican party to\\ncontinue his folly his crime. I be-\\nlieve he has been already informed\\nby those whose voice he cannot dis-\\nregard that he must stop and return\\n77", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0081.jp2"}, "82": {"fulltext": "ANTI-CARNEGIE\\nto American traditions. The country\\nhas no stomach for victories over\\npeople fighting for the right of self-\\ngovernment.\\nMy forecast is that the President\\nwill get out of the Philippines and\\nreturn to American principles, obtain-\\ning a shadowy protectorate of some\\nform that will save his face, and\\nthat he will then be able to appear\\nbefore the Republican convention as\\nhaving the Philippine question set-\\ntled, having given them the same\\npromise of independence he gave\\nCuba. Our party will then carry\\nthe Presidential election. If he ap-\\nproached the country with the war\\nin the Philippines unsettled, and the\\n73", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0082.jp2"}, "83": {"fulltext": "SCRAPS AND COMMENTS\\nconvention were free, it is improbable\\nthat he would get even the nomina-\\ntion. The weight would be too great\\nto carry.\\nThe nomination, however, he has\\nprobably already secured. But the\\nelection would then be another story.\\nIf the Democratic party were to drop\\nfree silver and come out, under the\\nleadership of the World, for Ameri-\\ncanism presenting to the people\\nthe clean-cut issue between the prin-\\nciples of Washington and those of\\nMcKinley there would be no doubt\\nof the result. Our party would be\\nbeaten, and deserve to be.\\nMr. Carnegie certainly misrepre-\\nsents the sentiments of the British\\n79", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0083.jp2"}, "84": {"fulltext": "ANTI-CARNEGIE\\npeople. We append an article from\\nthe London Daily Mail, April 27th.\\nThey are evidently not in sympathy\\nwith Carnegie and his following\\n11 The Americans are to be con-\\ngratulated warmly upon the victory\\nwhich they have won at Calumpit.\\nNow, at last, it looks as though the\\nback of the Filipinos resistance had\\nbeen broken, and Englishmen will be\\nparticularly glad of this fact, as they\\nalone appreciate to the full the dif-\\nficulties with which their cousins had\\nto contend.\\nThe victory is all the more wel-\\ncome and all the more grateful to us\\nbecause we have been watching with\\ndeep interest the efforts of a political\\n80", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0084.jp2"}, "85": {"fulltext": "SCRAPS AND COMMENTS\\nparty in the United States to humili-\\nate the nation and the Government\\nby persuading them to a disgraceful\\nand cowardly retreat.\\nThis party is insignificant in\\nstrength and influence, but what it\\nlacks in this direction it makes up\\nfor by its lung power. It has gone\\nto the length of endeavoring to\\ninduce American volunteers to de-\\nmand their recall in the face of the\\nenemy. To the eternal credit of\\nthese volunteers be it said that few\\nhave acted upon this treacherous\\nand unpatriotic instigation.\\nThe American people may well\\nbe proud of their soldiers. By the\\nvery nature of things volunteers en-\\n6 Si", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0085.jp2"}, "86": {"fulltext": "ANTI-CARNEGIE\\nlisted for a short war with a civilized\\nenemy are not the troops best fitted\\nfor work at a great distance from\\ntheir country, or for a tedious, pro-\\ntracted and harassing struggle with\\nan uncivilized foe in a tropical\\nclimate. But the determination of\\nvolunteers and regulars has been\\nsuch that they have not once been\\nworsted in battle.\\nFrom the Review of Reviews we\\nquote the following\\nFollowing up all the unhappy\\ninfluences to which our army and\\nnavy had to quietly submit without\\nturning a finger, there came the\\nblow from behind that did more\\nharm than all of these local influ-\\n82", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0086.jp2"}, "87": {"fulltext": "SCRAPS AND COMMENTS\\nences combined the agitation in\\nAmerica in behalf of the Filipinos,\\nand in opposition to the policy of\\nour Government, and of the army\\nand navy, as advised by such tried\\nmen as Admiral Dewey and General\\nOtis. It is remarkable how quickly\\nthe idea spread, not only through the\\nFilipino army but among the people\\nin the distant interior, that the\\nUnited States was wavering in its\\npolicy, and that it was probable that\\nif they held out long enough and\\npersisted in their position we would\\nwithdraw our army and give them\\nback the islands.\\nEvery discordant note that was\\nstruck in America was telegraphed\\n83", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0087.jp2"}, "88": {"fulltext": "ANTI-CARNEGIE\\nor written either to Hong Kong or\\nManila, and found its way by first\\nopportunity to the camps of the Fili-\\npino army and to the columns of the\\nnative press. Not satisfied, how-\\never, with the circulation given by\\nthe newspapers, what was said and\\ndone in America was printed in cir-\\ncular and pamphlet form and sent\\namong the people to encourage them.\\nIf the senior Senator of Massachu-\\nsetts could have witnessed the ex-\\npression of satisfaction depicted on\\nthe face of every Filipino soldier\\nwhen he read the sentiments ex-\\npressed by that distinguished man\\nin the halls of Congress, and then\\nhave seen the look of pain upon the\\n8 4", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0088.jp2"}, "89": {"fulltext": "SCRAPS AND COMMENTS\\nface of every American soldier when\\nhe realized that a United States\\nSenator was inspiring the enemy\\nopposite him, I am of the humble\\nopinion that he would have experi-\\nenced some feelings of regret at the\\ndirect effect of his argument. There\\nis no question that the belief was\\nprevalent among the Filipinos at the\\ntime the lighting began on February\\n4, that if they held out a sufficient\\nlength of time the Americans would\\ngive them what they asked. It is\\nnot my intention to cast any reflec-\\ntions upon the honesty and good\\nfaith of the men who have opposed\\nour policy in the Philippines, and I\\ndo not believe that any of them have\\n85", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0089.jp2"}, "90": {"fulltext": "ANTI-CARNEGIE\\nbeen actuated by other than the most\\npatriotic motives, unless, possibly,\\nthe natural tendency to make politi-\\ncal capital out of the troubles of\\nthose in power has inspired some of\\nthe criticism or opposition.\\nI heard not only Admiral Dewey\\nand Major-General Otis, but Gen-\\nerals MacArthur, Anderson, Hale,\\nLawton, Brigadier-General Otis and\\nColonels Smith and Summers use\\nterms as strong as I have on this un-\\nhappy feature of the war.\\nAndrew Carnegie has announced\\nhis intention of interesting himself\\nin politics the coming fall. It is to\\nbe hoped his doing so will not prove\\n86", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0090.jp2"}, "91": {"fulltext": "SCRAPS AND COMMENTS\\nas disastrous as his interest in the\\nPhilippine question. He should,\\nhowever, first prove that he has a\\nlegal right to take an active interest\\nin politics on this side of the water.\\nIf he cannot do so, he had better\\nhereafter do his voting in the Queen s\\ndominions.\\nThe presidential campaign of 1900\\npromises to be an exciting one. The\\ndisturbing element in this country\\nwho do not appreciate the prosper-\\nous condition of affairs to-day will\\nmake a fierce fight to change them\\nby electing another President. Let\\nall loyal citizens, irrespective of\\nparty, take an active interest in the\\ncoming campaign, and defeat the\\n87", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0091.jp2"}, "92": {"fulltext": "ANTI-CARNEGIE\\nenemies of representative govern-\\nment. We should also be careful to\\nelect only good, honest, loyal men\\nto represent us in Congress, as the\\nmachinations of traitors in the House\\nhave done and can do a deal of\\nmischief.\\nNow the public may think we speak very plain,\\nBut freedom of speech is part of the game,\\nFor Andrew Carnegie, that old bogie man,\\nWill frighten us all to death, if he can.\\nThe imperial ghost will never be laid\\nTill our Government does as Carnegie has said,\\nFor disgrace 11 be our portion, and dis-\\nhonor foul,\\nIf from those islands our flag s not hauled\\ndown.\\nHe has told Uncle Sam, and that very pat,\\nTo keep his hand out of the Far Eastern trap\\n88", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0092.jp2"}, "93": {"fulltext": "SCRAPS AND COMMENTS\\nHe must not attempt to give any help,\\nBut let each Filipino govern himself.\\nThey can take any Friar and roast in the sun,\\nAnd can even torment a poor little Nun\\nFreedom and happiness each one must seek,\\nFor Carnegie said so in a most able speech.\\nHe has said our Republic as Sovereign may\\nplay\\nBut for a moment, not even a day\\nFor should she in earnest continue the thing,\\nWar and rumors of war it will bring.\\nHe will write, rant, and rave over questions so\\ngrave,\\nIt seems only Carnegie our country can save\\nNot content with his lot, much money to make,\\nHe endeavors to steer our great Ship of State.\\nThis book is a waif. It never\\ncan enter the doors of the Carnegie\\nlibraries. But those who pity the\\n8 9", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0093.jp2"}, "94": {"fulltext": "ANTI-CARNEGIE\\npoor, for whose benefit it is written,\\nwill take it to their homes. And\\nthose who do not, will take it also\\nso either way the waif will find a\\nhome.\\nTHE END.\\n90", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0094.jp2"}, "95": {"fulltext": "", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0095.jp2"}, "96": {"fulltext": "", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0096.jp2"}, "97": {"fulltext": "", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0097.jp2"}, "98": {"fulltext": "1889", "height": "2625", "width": "1882", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0098.jp2"}, "99": {"fulltext": "", "height": "2615", "width": "1840", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0099.jp2"}, "100": {"fulltext": "UBRARY OF CONGRESS\\n013 744 700 9\\nm^ma", "height": "2890", "width": "1960", "jp2-path": "anticarnegiescra00camp_0100.jp2"}}